Hi
@Peter 9611 and welcome to the forum. Just to add to
@Leadinglights post.
Newbies are very often confused by the tests and the numbers produced. There are two types of measurement.....
- HbA1C. This is the test used for diagnostic purposes but does not measure blood glucose directly. It is a laboratory test done on a sample of blood taken from a vein. If you want to know what it actually measures then google it and get the details. The upshot is the result can be used to take a view on your overall blood glucose control. HbA1c changes slowly and so can be taken at any time with no advanced preparation. The result is usually given in mmol/mol although sometimes it is expressed as a percentage. The interpretation is as above.
- Blood glucose measurements. These directly measure the amount of glucose in your blood and is expressed in mmol/l. It is what you get from a hand held meter. Unlike the HbA1C it varies quite a lot in the short term, mostly depending on what you have eaten and how long before the test you ate it. As such, interpretation of the results is not straightforward. It is an excellent test if you are experimenting with diet and want rapid feedback to allow you to make adjustments. T1 diabetics can use them to adjust insulin doses and to cross check readings from continuous monitors.
View attachment 29069
So both tests tell you something about your diabetes and the picture above gives you an idea about how they are related. The blood glucose scale sort of represents the average blood glucose you might get at any given HbA1c.
We often, on the forum, get questions asked about converting the results of spot tests to an HbA1c result. There are ways of going about that but it requires a lot of analysis and for me is one for the nerds. What you can say is that if your Hba1c measurement is high, then this will be reflected in the range you get with spot readings.
So, as a rough rule of thumb, an HbA1c of 48 mmol/mol will result in an average of spot readings of around 8 mmol/l with individual readings ranging from lows around 5 mmol/l to highs around 10 mmol/l.
Hope that helps a bit. Don't worry if it doesn't, you will get the hang of it as time progresses!